Commercial Auto Insurance in South Carolina
A commercial auto insurance policy in South Carolina runs an estimated $0 a year. That number is a representative estimate for comparison, not a quote: your actual premium is driven by your vehicles, drivers, radius of operation, and limits, which is why comparing carriers matters.
*Illustrative figure for comparison, not a quote. Top local risk: hurricane & wind.
South Carolina's dominant exposure is hurricane & wind, and that risk is a big reason commercial auto insurance is priced and underwritten the way it is locally. Insurers weigh hurricane & wind history when they set rates and decide what to cover, so it is worth confirming your policy actually responds to it before you buy.
With roughly 5.4M residents, South Carolina is a sizeable commercial auto insurance market, and its hurricane & wind exposure is one of the factors insurers weigh when pricing coverage here. Premiums and availability vary widely by carrier, so confirm current requirements with the South Carolina Department of Insurance before you rely on them.
Coverage that matters here.
Liability
Pays for bodily injury and property damage caused by a business vehicle in an at-fault accident, up to policy limits.
Physical damage
Covers collision and comprehensive losses on business vehicles — accident repairs, theft, vandalism, and weather damage.
Hired and non-owned
Extends liability coverage to rented vehicles and employees' personal vehicles used for business errands.
Medical payments
Pays medical expenses for the driver and passengers in your business vehicle regardless of fault.
What a policy responds to.
Other insurance in South Carolina.
Compare every line for South Carolina, or see the full South Carolina insurance hub.
Commercial Auto Insurance in South Carolina, answered.
How much is commercial auto insurance in South Carolina?
A representative commercial auto insurance premium in South Carolina runs around $0 per year. This is an estimate for comparison, not a quote — your actual rate depends on the property, coverage limits, and insurer.
Why won't my personal auto policy cover business use?
Personal auto policies are priced and written for personal and commuting use. Business use — making deliveries, transporting tools, visiting clients — increases mileage, exposure, and accident risk in ways a personal policy does not account for. Insurers can deny a claim if the vehicle was being used for business at the time.
What is hired and non-owned auto coverage?
Hired auto covers vehicles you rent for business purposes. Non-owned auto covers employees' personal vehicles when they drive them for work — running a company errand, for example. Both are often added as endorsements and are particularly important if employees ever use personal cars for business tasks.
How is commercial auto insurance priced?
Rates are based on the type of vehicle, its primary use, the radius of operation, the driver's record, and the coverage limits selected. Fleet discounts are typically available for businesses insuring multiple vehicles on one policy. Higher-risk uses like long-haul delivery cost more than local service routes.